Macron and Merkel try to showcase EU unity as Brexit looms
Macron and Merkel try to showcase EU unity as Brexit looms/node/1569681/world
Macron and Merkel try to showcase EU unity as Brexit looms
French President Emmanuel Macron welcomes German Chancellor Angela Merkel as she arrives for a dinner to discuss European matters ahead of next week’s EU Summit, at the Elysee Palace in Paris, France, October 13, 2019. (Reuters)
Macron and Merkel try to showcase EU unity as Brexit looms
The leaders on Wednesday will first visit Airbus headquarters, as a symbol of European industrial cooperation
The French and German delegations, including key ministers from both governments, will discuss global trade tensions
Updated 16 October 2019
Associated Press
TOULOUSE: French President Emmanuel Macron and German Chancellor Angela Merkel are meeting in southern France, one day before a key EU summit that may approve a divorce deal with Britain.
The leaders on Wednesday will first visit Airbus headquarters, as a symbol of European industrial cooperation, before holding bilateral talks and a French-German Cabinet meeting in the city of Toulouse.
Macron and Merkel will discuss Brexit as EU and British officials scramble to make a deal before Thursday’s summit in Brussels — the last before the U.K’s scheduled departure from the EU on Oct. 31.
The French and German delegations, including key ministers from both governments, will also discuss global trade tensions, the fight against climate change, European defense projects and how to defend EU copyright rules, Macron’s office said.
Bangladesh votes on Thursday in the first parliamentary elections since a 2024 uprising ended Sheikh Hasina’s 15-year iron-fisted rule
Updated 8 sec ago
AFP
DHAKA: Bangladesh votes on Thursday in the first parliamentary elections since a 2024 uprising ended Sheikh Hasina’s 15-year iron-fisted rule — and also holds a landmark referendum for sweeping democratic reforms. The interim government led by Muhammad Yunus, the 85?year?old Nobel Peace Prize winner, says the reform charter is designed to prevent a return to autocratic one-party rule. The lengthy document, known as the “July Charter” after the uprising that toppled Hasina, proposes term limits for prime ministers, the creation of an upper house of parliament, stronger presidential powers, and greater judicial independence. What are the reforms? Voters will be asked whether they approve the charter, which lays out wide?ranging constitutional, electoral, and institutional reforms. These include expanding parliament into a bicameral system, with a new 100?seat upper house allocated according to each party’s share of the national vote. It also includes increased representation of women in parliament, and the election of the deputy speaker and parliamentary committee chairs from the opposition. Along with the polls, the International Foundation for Electoral Systems (IFES) calls it a “critical juncture for Bangladesh’s democratic and constitutional order.” Who supports it? Yunus, who will step down after the vote, has promoted the charter as the defining legacy of his caretaker administration. “If you cast the ‘yes’ vote, the door to building the new Bangladesh will open,” Yunus said in backing the reforms. Hasina’s former ruling Awami League has been barred from taking part. A “yes” vote is backed by the key frontrunners, the Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP), and its rival, the Jamaat-e-Islami led coalition. That includes the National Citizen Party (NCP), formed by student leaders who spearheaded the uprising. But many parties have also submitted notes of dissent over elements of the charter. Will it be approved? With key parties calling for a yes vote, many believe it will pass. But many ordinary voters say they are confused by the complexity of the proposals. “Knowledge gaps are huge,” Dhaka’s IID policy research center warned on Tuesday, saying just over a third of people it had surveyed — 37 percent — know what the charter includes. Among those without formal eduction, that drops to eight percent. The IID said the results suggested “closed-door reform bargaining” was prioritized “over public engagement at the scale required for an informed, inclusive referendum.” The referendum, passed by a simple majority, notes that if approved, it will be “binding on the parties that win” the election. But it would still need to be ratified by the new parliament.